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STREET-SMART SWAGGER &
TENDRESSE:
A REVIEW OF AUGUST
KLEINZAHLER'S
Green Sees Things in Waves
Farrar Straus Giroux, 1998; paper: $12
Andrew Osborn
Though a
quarrel in the streets is a thing to
be hated,
the energies displayed in it are fine.
—Keats
August Kleinzahler is a flâneur
for our times, resolutely sniffing the city's corners for chance
verse, demotic speech patterns, instances of authentic humanity.
A son of North Jersey, he has written both sides of the George
Washington Bridge, evinced the boarding-house and bar scenes of
Montreal and Vancouver, stalked Jean Follain through Paris, and,
in San Francisco, taken the Haight, Golden Gate Park, and
Chinatown into his bootsoles. "Another side / of the city […]
uno altro aspetto," he explains to a Signora "in an alley
below Mission, smelling / something much too intimate."
Everywhere he goes, he achieves such street-level intimacy. As
suggested by the titles of his first three collections—Storm
Over Hackensack, Earthquake Weather, and Red Sauce,
Whiskey and Snow—Kleinzahler also consistently attends to
climate and its swing-partner, mood. I was therefore not
surprised to find in his latest book, Green Sees Things in
Waves, a piece titled "Snow in North Jersey." Nor was I
surprised that its narrating presence, initially observing from
some remove on-high, gets drawn down to take on the vernacular of
its blue-collar subjects:
while in the upstairs of a thousand duplexes
with the TV on, cancers tick tick tick
and the snow continues to fall and blanket
these crowded rows of frame and brick
with their heartbreaking porches and castellations
and the red '68 Impala on blocks
and Joe he's drinking again and Myra's boy Tommy
in the old days it would have been a disgrace
and Father Keenan's not been having a good winter[.]
Later we hear 'ho dear and "lordjesussaveus they're still
making babies." Such plights and gripes are the one-off flakes of
this snowfall.
There's something here also of the
undiscriminating snow in Joyce's "The Dead," which, falling
general all over Ireland, levels differences in social status as
it mutes the landscape's contours. But Kleinzahler is not
interested in allusion for its own sake (the title "On First
Looking into Joseph Cornell's Diaries" being an exception) so
much as in adapting what has been shown to work for new purposes.
Moving on from the railyards and bus barns, his state-side
flurries fall no less on the "big houses along the river bluff,"
but there the snippets of speech cease and the owners are called
"swells"—as if empathic access were cut off with the weather-
proofing. The poem's class-consciousness heightens and is
formalized at the end.
It's snowing on us all
and on a three-story fix-up off of Van Vorst
Park
a young lawyer couple from Manhattan bought
where for no special reason in back of a closet
a thick, dusty volume from the '30s sits open
with a broken spine and smelling of mildew
to a chapter titled Social Realism
Presumably the lawyer couple will eventually fix up their fix-
up, and out will go the broken-spined reminder of all that
the first five-sixths of the poem showed was worthy of attention.
Kleinzahler fixes it there instead, against the amnesia of upward
mobility.
Elsewhere he is similarly ill-at-ease,
or maybe just watchful, about what happens when one shapes life
with all its jagged edginess into an aesthetic object. It can be
a lot like gentrification. That's not always a bad thing, but
it's important to keep an eye on what's getting gutted or
spackled over. When "Whole floors, / [are] broken up and carted
off" in "Where Galluccio Lived" (Earthquake), there's a
well-timed pause, then the lyric speaker reflects: "Memory
stinks, like good marinara sauce. / You never get that garlic
smell / out of the walls." The point being, I suppose, that
whether memory stinks good or stinks bad, sometimes it's worth
catching a whiff of, remembering. Poets who routinely opt for
open, indeterminate structures or put a fine finish on everything
thereby forfeit much of their chosen art's mnemonic advantage. In
Green, "The Conversation" shifts the focus of such concerns from
urban renewal to interpersonal relationships.
This then was the conversation
[…]
That drove all ahead of it
A great wave or wind
That tore apart the very ground
That sent up a wall of debris
That would leave nothing
if, as Kleinzahler posits, one
Put one's own arm
One's hand
Down into the engine of its force
To know its workings[.]
By the end of this narrow, sparsely punctuated poem, having
likened the conversation again to a whirlwind and upped the ante
("Why not") with a "biblical reek," he has nevertheless seen it
scaled down into something "kept in the vestibule / An ornament /
A kinetic sculpture / In the corner / On a stand / An objet
d'art." Who has not had such a conversation? It seethes, a
malignant presence, and yet too worked-at to part with or forget.
Uncharacteristically, Kleinzahler offers not so much as a
syllable of the conversation itself; instead, the relentless
morphing involved in his attempts to contain it convey its
menace.
Kleinzahler aims at keeping such
tensions keen. Albeit somewhat up-the-establishment in
demeanor, he is too wily a craftsman to go unheeded by
academe. Alloyed of his own brand of social realism and
eclectic scholarship, then refined with an ear tuned by
Basil Bunting and Thelonious Monk, his poems help readers of
all walks appreciate the rich store of rhythms, images, and
emotions among the down-and-out without feeling patronized
or preached to. The book's title poem exemplifies his talky
affability. In the space of twenty or so breath-long lines
the eponymous "Green"—whom I had taken to be a color with
some abstract agency like that of Wallace Stevens' Phosphor
"Reading by His Own Light"—has become "our boy," though
we've since learned that he suffers from perceptual lag and
hallucinated intimidation and will learn that these maladies
result from an LSD overdose back when. If, thinking back to
Joyce, the message Gabriel reads in the snow is for all
your learned opinions and eloquence, you are no more elect
or alive than . . . , Kleinzahler's cautionary message
is more invitational: don't let creature comforts deprive
you of the
troves an eye and ear to the underside affords. Don't let your
schooling narrow your bandwidth. Take time to smell the garlic.
Unlike Whitman, Kleinzahler is one of
the roughs by his own choosing. This has been evident from the
start but is foregrounded in new work like "What the Science of
the Ancients Told," a sinuous long poem about the pulse
diagnostics ("Sphygmology") practiced in medieval Cathay and by
the 10th-century Arab physician-philosopher Avicenna. This poet
indulgently flaunts a love of esoteric, often tongue-torquing
words and phrases. "52 Pick-Up" (the title acknowledges the
poem's let-the-cards-fall-where-they-may lack of ambition)
consists solely of a dual-column list of 52 samples:
"Suzerainty," Noam Chomsky's "Colorless green ideas sleep
furiously," "Huitzilopochtli," "Sforzato," "Korsakoff's
Syndrome," "Guelph." When such roughage crops up in the course of
a more narrative poem, you can tell the poet's feelin' his oats,
and Kleinzahler feels his oats regularly. Thus, we get poems like
"Glossalalia All the Way to Buffalo," featuring Colonel Vladimir
Khotchokakov (schoolbus humor). But he restrains himself
admirably when the mood or tone requires, stripping down his
diction as for the black-and-white and eventually pictographic-
seeming scene of "Silver Gelatin." From a high-rise window, a
domestic is (optically) "caught through a net of griseous
branches":
She leans forward now, pushing in haste.
At her own now extreme angle
and with the black coat and hat,
the pram underneath her,
the snow underfoot,
she looks, for all the world, from here,
a broken-off piece of Chinese ideogram
moving across the page.
I love the austere delicacy of this poem. It is Pound's "In a
Station of the Metro" writ larger. Kleinzahler's one lexical
luxury, "griseous" in lieu of "grey," is warranted, imbuing the
scene with a granularity. With the same efficiency the lack of a
like in that final would-be simile bespeaks the broken-
off-ness.
One sign of Kleinzahler's remarkable versatility is that
despite his intense commitment to the urban preterite, he
has a real knack for waxing urbane. For lyrics commemorating
courtships of the not so distant past (his
own), he will sometimes don the rhetorical flourish of courtly
rhythms, diction, and syntax. In the second section of the
charming "They Ofttimes Choose," his Corinnas, Megs, and
Philomels, well-pleased,
Then take their leave but are not truly gone,
for amidst the cushions and disarray
bracelets and earrings, a kerchief I'll find.
They, who are not careless in other ways,
are careless neither in what they leave behind
[…]
How well these ladies do contrive, how well,
to keep me in thrall with their sweet neglect.
Equal parts Wyatt and Herrick. You can almost hear the
harpsichord plink-plinking in the background.
Of a piece, albeit less mannered, are
the last five lines of "Watching Young Couples with an Old
Girlfriend on Sunday Morning." Having made mention of MTV, tattoo
ubiquity, and huevos rancheros, each anti-aesthetic and somewhat
alienating, he asks, "Or do I recoil from their youthfulness and
health?"
Oh, not recoil, just fail to see ourselves.
And yet, this tenderness between us that remains
was mortared first with a darkness that got loose, a frenzy,
we still, we still refuse to name.
Note how the same consonants recur, not to rhyme but to swarm, at
the ends of those final lines: remains (/r/-/m/-/n/-/z/),
frenzy (/f/-/r/-/n/-/z/), refuse to name (/r/-
/f/-/z/ /n/-/m/). That's the kind of phonetic finesse almost
anyone will appreciate on some level—probably unconsciously,
grinning all the while—but too few poets aim for these days. The
anti-eloquence set veer away with a theory-bound vengeance, while
the New Formalists, who ostensibly strive for such effects, cheat
themselves with rigidity. The same thing goes for metrics. Having
laid down a perfect iambic pentameter line ("Oh, not recoil . .
."), Kleinzahler relies on his departure therefrom to register
the pacing, the give-and-take, of cognitive pursuit and
repression. Were "a frenzy" not held overtime in the penultimate
line, the stymied caesura between "we still" and "we still" would
dissolve; "a frenzy" would seem a glib denomination of that
darkness, and the poem would end in oxymoron, the unnamed named.
Despite Kleinzahler's ranging, an
elsewhere uncommon combination of brutish virility and empathic
vulnerability ("tenderness . . . mortared first with a darkness")
pervades. It was at the heart of "The Sausage-Master of Minsk"
(Storm), whose hardy, pungent hero pursues a "half-formed" girl
and ends up with mussed hair "interlaced with fine, pubescent
yarn." One could hear it in that same early volume's "Vikings of
the Air," whose speaker puts on a piratical swagger to bark
orders—"Dump the goods, you scallywags, save this
balloon"—but is inwardly an even-tempered optimist,
reflecting, "Happily, […] we can buy air by dropping what we
must." Red Sauce's epigraph, from "Louisiana blues man" Herman E.
Johnson, speaks to the same mix: "So my life was just that
way, to keep out of trouble, / drink my little whisky, an' go an'
do little ugly things / like that, but in a cue-tee way."
Finally, in Green, it is the conversant canine of "The Dog
Stoltz," so modest in its fiction, that most poignantly
perpetuates this signature motif. Kleinzahler demonstrates
devotion more readily for animals than humans and when attending
to humans is most alert to their animal instincts and needs.
Stoltz, "part bull and something else," is something else indeed;
he not only talks, he is planning an essay on the war poet
Sassoon. Kleinzahler's human persona, the "I" of this poem,
eulogizes the mongrel as "first beast, then scholar, then abject
and adored." When he then asks parenthetically, "Say, who among
us does not care to be undressed?" he is, I think, acknowledging,
in the devious, sideways-glancing way of dreams, that Stoltz is a
second version of himself in doggy dishabille. Allowing for some
hyperbole, the brief pedigree suits Kleinzahler's poetic persona
to a T, and could have served me as the title of this review.
What's interesting, then, is the rhetorical, human dream-self's
disowning of the seemingly more-at-home-with-himself animal
scholar. He protests too much (twice) that Stoltz does not belong
to him and significantly slips into the present tense even as he
avows an over-and-done-with separation:
He was not my dog, you know. He simply followed me out
of what can only have been a very fine home,
such were his graces, his recondite tastes.
But he was a killer, too, and rather smelled.
I cannot accommodate another animal now, please understand.
I am between places. I will yearn for Stoltz, but no.
I don't think Kleinzahler could abandon the dog Stoltz in him
even if he truly wished to. I for one do not wish him to, for the
pure products of Kleinzahler's own grace and recondite tastes,
killer (prosodic) instinct, street-smart swagger, and
tendresse are winning. Green Sees Things in Waves
deserves readers in droves.
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